Becoming a nurse is just one of the ideal professions for persons who have dedication to help others whose health is in bad condition by lessening, if not taking away, the pain and suffering they are currently experiencing. Apart from dedication to make a positive contribution and improve the life of others, the demand for nurses today is still high because baby boomers are aging and some nurses are also retiring. So there is always a need for new health care workers who will be entrusted to properly take care and use the hospital medical equipments that will help determine the homeostasis if it is stable or not.

But more than its good points of becoming a nurse, do you know that this profession has also some disadvantages? One of them is about health matters. Just consider the working schedule of nurses. There are times that they will be assigned on night shift, which let them suffer from sleep-deprivation. According to health experts, sleep deprivation is one of the primary reasons why many nurses today are at risk of developing life-threatening diseases such heart disease, obesity, ulcers, as well as depression since the circadian rhythm of a person is affected.

And in a recent study that was first published on PLoS Medicine Journal, it also revealed that aside from the previously identified disorders, these people who are who are primarily responsible for using the different hospital medical equipments for monitoring vital signs have also a bigger chance to develop type 2 diabetes.

It is a known fact that when a person is still working on a period wherein he or she is supposed to be in bed, the glands that are responsible for producing hormones essentials for the overall function of body system is likewise disrupted. Too much or too little production of hormones, according to medical doctors who are more expert in using today’s innovative hospital medical equipments, could cause abnormalities in the body. With the case of sleep deprivation on nurses and their risk to develop Type 2 diabetes, the professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health named Dr. Franklin Hu said that lack of sleep affects the ability of the body to properly produce insulin, which helps regulate the blood sugar levels. 

Picture
biological clock of a human/circadian rhythm
1/24/2012 05:18:23 am

Every healthcare provider should switch to an EMR solution. Paper based records and prescriptions are a thing of the past now and it would be best for both doctors and patients to take advantage of their features and accessibility.

Reply
1/24/2012 05:18:54 am

This is my first opportunity to visit this website. I found some interesting things and I will apply to the development of my blog. Thanks for sharing useful information.

Reply



Leave a Reply.